Two Thousand Maniacs-1964
Director H.G.Lewis
Starring William Kerwin, Connie Mason
Scott’s Review #79
Reviewed June 28, 2014
Grade: B
Two Thousand Maniacs is a 1964 offering by gore director H.G. Lewis set in the South.
The premise surrounds a southern town, ironically named Pleasant Valley, slaughtered and destroyed during the Civil War. It is resurrected every one hundred years to enact revenge on northerners who are unlucky enough to stumble upon their town.
Five nice-looking, fashionable tourists, headed to Atlanta, are duped by local townspeople into making a wrong turn and given the hero’s welcome by the town folk for a festive centennial celebration.
The welcome is, of course, a guise for a sinister plot to dismember and barbeque the tourists as part of the feast of the celebration.
The film takes a bit to get going, there is no killing until thirty minutes into it then excels into high gear as some of the most graphic, brutal deaths ensue.
A woman is tied to a platform as one townsperson after another attempt to hit a bullseye so that an enormous boulder falls, carnival dunk-tank style, stoning her to death.
Another victim has each limb tied to a horse as they gallop in different directions, thus dismembering him.
Still, another is forced into a barrel laced with nails and sent rolling down a hill.
Another has her thumb and arm chopped off and served for dinner.
These are gruesome deaths.
A film like this is done for fun, thus the term horror-comedy, but surely heavily influenced other macabre films that followed- The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) and Deliverance (1972).
The southern rednecks are played to the hilt by mostly real townspeople and the cheerful song “The South will rise again” sticks in the viewer’s mind long after the film ends.
The tone is bright and cheerful, and the townspeople, on the surface, seem happy-go-lucky and warm. They even kill with charm.
Two Thousand Maniacs (1964) is a fun, splatter film from one of the genre’s most revered filmmakers.